Sorry for not having the time for a translation. In essence Mr. Barth Eide is refuting any claims of secretative role redefinitions or any confusion as to the intended operational use of the new fighters.I think that Barth Eide, a norvegian government official, responded to John Bergs comments in a very good way. Unfortunately, this is only in norvegian. Anyone that want´s to translate? To sum up - all three (two) contenders meet the norvegian specification. All contenders have plus and minuses - stealth, speed, price etc
http://www.abcnyheter.no/node/70865
In the following radio debate Mr. Barth Eide went as far as to say that Mr. Berg "has absolutely no idea what he is talking about", refering to the programme requirements and how the F-35 capabilities fit into this.
Basically, the the refered "secret letter" was partially missunderstood by several newspapers and thus taken out of context. The letter, which states that the A-G role has priority, relates to the preparations for a specific simulator run and beares no relevance to the operational priorities as a whole.
Infact the programme specifications have, from the very start years ago, quite clearly defined the next fighter type as multi role. There has never been any confusion or disagreements on this principle issue. Not by the millitary, the programme office, the defence ministry nor the political wings. The reasons for the multi role requirement have been well established and should not come as a surprise to anyone who've had a vested interest in this subject.
How Mr. Berg, a defence analyst, and the media failed to realise this is not immediately apparent. What seems apparent, however, is that Mr. Berg has out-played his role as a credible authority on the fighter programme. Claiming that the F-35 is nothing but an attack bomber is one thing, but to insiunuate that the RNoAF is favoring the F-35 simply to use it in offensive USA-led campaigns is well past the boundries of a rational debate.
Regards,
B. Bolsøy
Oslo
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